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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  February 12, 2013 9:20am-11:00am EST

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imus: he played for i think the lakers one time. warner: a good ball player. >> they called him hank. imus: he and his son they didn't talk. and so now what happened with-- >> well, he went to his son's-- henry bibby went to his son's high school game in phoenix and in the stands arguing with the referees to the point where he had to be forced to leave the game with a police escort. connell: great. warner: get out, stay home. imus: 6:18 "imus in the morning" program. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ imus in the morning ♪ >> two views of the fate of the union.
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the way the president sees it and the way you see it. they are very different. good morning, everyone. tonight president obama gives what is being called an aggressive state of the union address. it's been widely leaked. he will call for robust government involvement in the economy. more spending on education, infrastructure and green energy. pay for it with more taxes on the private sector and on the rich. the president says the government can rebuild the middle class. on capitol hill there will be numerous standing ovations, but 80% thinks that the opportunity for the next generation is disappearing. more than half think the economy will never fully recover and just as the president demands more spending, he reports waste and fraud in the program is put in place. there you have it. the great divide. that's perhaps the true state of the union. stay right there, "varney & company" is about to begin with dr. ben carson.
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>> all right. everybody, the headline of this morning is dr. ben carson, the man who lectured president obama at the national prayer breakfast last week. he joins us right now. dr. carson, you've taken a leadership role whether you like it or not. what is your next move? are you going to stand for elective office? >> i have no intention of getting into the political arena unless god forces me into it because i think it's just such a cesspool and i do think we need voices of reason. we need people who can talk about things that make sense and you know, the amount of e-mails and calls that we've gotten from across the country, people just resonating so much with something that makes sense and of course, nothing makes sense coming out of washington because everything is attached to some
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special interest group. stuart: don't you feel a calling? you obviously felt some calling to stand up right in front of the president and make your points. don't you feel a calling to pursue this and make a real difference to america? >> well, i feel that all of us, all of us citizens have a calling to make our voices heard. that's the problem. you know, this country was for us, the people. and we're allowing the government to become the primary entity. it was supposed to be to facilitate things. we're allowing it to rule us completely and that is the natural tendency of government. those people who founded our nation spelled this out very clearly. i talked about this in the book. that's the reason i wrote the book to give people perspective what's going on and glad that people are starting to read it now. but the fact of the matter is, as every government tends to grant power and to get bigger and to take the power away from
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the people, our framers designed the constitution that was supposed to stop that from happening, but as we begin to disregard the constitution, we're thwarting what they so cleverly did. stuart: you, sir, have jumped right into the middle of the ongoing ferocious debate in the united states and we very much thank you, a, for being with us today and b, for jumping right into it. it was a pressure having you back on the program. come and see us again, soon, dr. carson. come back soon, thank you, sir. >> thank you. stuart: all right. people not only leaving their states, yeah, they are leaving the country because of taxes. we've got that for you and stocks opening in a moment. [ male announcer ] at his current pace, bob will retire when he's 153, which would be fine if bob were a vampire.
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president is going to demand more spending. i've got to believe that the stock market wants more government spending, that that is a plus for the market. what do you say? >> well, i'm going to go and say yes on that one, while americans, we want the administration to stop spending and building up the debt. in the meantime, the stock market is reacting differently. we see health care stocks doing well and obamacare and financials doing well and bailouts to the auto industry, spending on solar. so you're seeing the markets doing well and you have the as long charts there. and last week we gained 5% in 2010, 11% in 2009, almost 20%, so, we've had four straight years of gains, plus now as well. so, the stock market looks-- >> all right. government spending works for some. thanks, nicole. i've got two stocks for you, big names, you know them. it wants to get into ticket sales as a way to make more money. you want a ticket to a clapton concert, for example, you log on
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to his facebook page and you buy the ticket. the stock show reacting badly. next company, apple, the chief tim cook is going to attend tonight's state of the union address and sit next to michelle obama and probably won't affect the stock, the stock price now is at 480, however, and inching up towards 500. in the next hour, i'm going to have my take on what apple should do with that huge pile of cash it's got. 137 billion dollars. talk about that at 10:23 this morning, back to nicole. burger king expanding the menu? you really like the new options, apparently it's all about the premier brand coffee, is that it? >> that's right, it's all about coffee. they're joining mcdonald's and starbucks and dunkin' donuts. and we see, they're talking about a custom beverages, so from lattes to iced coffee. so this is what we are looking at for carnival for burger king.
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so, that's something that we'll watch and you can ask eva longoria later, she's right there. stuart: eva is it on the show. eva longoria is on the show later, okay. nicole: i know. stuart: watch out, here she comes. and carnival cruise line, it's adrift and no power, ugly. what's the stock doing. >> imagine you're on that ship. imagine how the stock is faring, this needs to be pull and tugboats out there and imus says how the pilots are backing up. imagine being stranded on the ship. stuart: but the stock is up, the stock is nearly 39 a share, ou cannot explain it. >> you can explain it, maybe someone is going to come and rescue the ship. stuart: and thanks, nicole very much. let's get to gas prices, and you're paying much more at the pump. the national average for regular now hitting 3.60.
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up two cents just overnight and that means gas up 30 cents in the last month. it's the highest level ever for this time of year. now, look at california. they spiked 13 cents in the past week, 4.06. that's the average for regular in the formerly golden state. all right. here is the argument. people move or adjust the matter when tax rates go up. is that true? let's bring in the man with the evidence. and murdoch is a fox news contributor. first of all, are people leaving the united states, i mean, this is international tax migration, is that happening? >> it is happening, stuart. last year, about 1800 people left the united states and renounced their citizenship and went overseas and i've paid enough tax and going somewhere where i can keep my money. >> it's not a flood, but up from previous years. >> it may go up.
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higher taxes and peststering, you're the not paying your fair share, how dare you, a lot of negative rhetoric from president obama and allies, and many people say, fine i'll go somewhere where i'll be treated better. stuart: let's bring in the internal migration. could you say it's a flood of people leaving high tax states to know or low tax states. % can you go that far? >> and one that i say is a pretty swift river. stuart: good one. >> a book how many must i walk, and found in research between 1995 and 2010, 2 trillion dollars worth of wealth packed up and left high tax states like new york, california, illinois and went to low tax or no income tax states like nevada and florida and generally moving to southern states where taxes are lower and they go and leave with their money and jobs with them and here in the high-tech suffer as a consequence. stuart: more recently, california just imposed a 13.3%
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state tax rate at the highest level of income. i would have thought that that would really encourage migration, people leaving california. i mean, rick perry, governor of texas he's in california. >> absolutely. stuart: he's he saying come over, come on over. >> absolutely. stuart: now, you mentioned 2 trillion dollars worth of wealth, is that going to be now? >> i think you'll see more and more. a great example is phil mickelson who lives in california and said i'm going to make the major change, i can't take that anymore, out of every dollar as a professional golfer, he gets 37 cents. is that a fair share keep 37 of the doll aar and tiger woods we to florida. stuart: '96. >> go to florida there's no income tax. stuart: are the states like california going to say, wait a second, you can't just walk away. we're going to impose an exit fee, an exit tax, that's
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possible, isn't it? >> it's entirely possible. like a financial barbed wire, put financial barbed wire around the state and people are running across the barbed wire and we're going to grab money when you leave. it's tyrannical about it, and rich people when they leave. you kind it goes down. and jerry brown wants more money for whatever, high speed rail or whatever, considering lower taxes and wealthy state attract more people in. rick prry is going to give back surplus money to the people, and more taxes and give some of it back to the taxpayers if he's not able to spend it. >> i think your message falls on deaf ears, unfortunately in new york. >> and deroy murdoch, thank you, sir. north korea confirmed its third nuclear test came out late last night. and it was significantly larger than the previous test in '06 and '09 and north korea test
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launched a ballistic missile in december. that's kind of ominous. now, president obama calls pt nuke test highly provocative. the council is holding an emergency meeting and it's going to be fine. new at 10, actress eva longoria is famous. here she is celebrating president obama at the democratic national convention. >> because eva longoria worked at wendy's flipping burgers, she needed a tax break. the eva longoria who works on movie sets does not. stuart: well, does she want higher taxes is the ultimate question. well, she will be on the program in the next hour. i am going to ask her how she feels about paying more than 50% of her income in taxes to the government and she is going to sell me potato chips. can't wait for that. coming up at ten o'clock. we want to hear from you, please, send your e-mails right now varney@foxbusiness.com and we're trying to get to some of them and read them on the air this morning. seven early movers, first off
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michael kors, a brand i am 'm familiar with four daughters. charles payne discussed the stock a month ago. the company said it made more money, up 12% ladies and gentlemen. next, coca-cola profit up, big international sales, at that stock is down 2%, how about that? good year tire makes more than expected and predicts more weakness in europe, everybody is predicting that, the stock is down. next, level 3 communications, losing less money in its core network business. the market doesn't like that, it's down 13%, that's a hit. avon selling more products, but its north american business is slowing down. nonetheless, the stock is up. that's a big move. 11%. netflix, got to follow this stock. a new partnership with dreamworks to produce children's shows, that stock is up again. $182 a share, i believe in the
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past couple of weeks, it's almost doubled. astonishing, last, reynolds american, that's the company. a shipping of fewer cigarettes and the stock is down just a little bit and 43 on reynolds, the dow is opened, it's actually dead flat. it's down a half point. that is dead flat. all right, i'm eating up the time here, so, here are 60 seconds worth of everything else we've got for you today. virtually no coverage of dr. ben carson's speech in mainstream % media, virtually none, except those who asked the question, was it offensive? our media watch dog, brent bozell weighs in on that 10:15. the government gives away free stuff and you know that, all those programs do is bring waste and fraud. more than 2 billion dollars worth of cell phones for poor people and 41% of them cannot prove their eligibility. i think that's waste and fraud. the judge will be in on that one, 10:35. and the city of houston wants to fingerprint, wait for it.
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fingerprint and photograph anyone who sells gold to a gold dealer. they're looking for thieves. the judge argues invasion of privacy. and paper trail-- >> we're now up 3 1/2 points, look at oil, please, i think they're back at $97 a barrel and no end in sight for rising gas prices where you have it now. a shortage of doctors in california. their solution there. see your pharmacist or a nurse. devaluing the degree that doctors have earned all in the name of obamacare. our own doctor, marc siegel joins us next. (announcer) at scottrade, our clients trade and invest exactly how they want.
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>> we've got another unintended consequence of obamacare. a doctor shortage in california. there are not enough doctors to treat all the new people who are going to have health coverage, so, the state is considering new rules that would allow nondoctors like nurses or pharmacists to perform treatments that normally are reserved for m.d.'s. doctor marc siegel, if you were in california to my mind this would devalue your medical degree and all the money that you spent in training and study. >> absolutely, stuart. couple of points, first off, this isn't california alone, ii's all over the united states. but talking about california. 30% of the doctors there are reaching retirement age, about 16 of the counties have primary care shortages. we saw a huge primary care doctor shorttge in massachusetts after the state law passed there and now we'll see the same thing nationwide over the next few years and in addition to that, there's the doctors that are going to quit or going to scale
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back because they can't afford to work under the current situation with more and more expenses and cutting of fees. now, the problem is we can't just replace these doctors with pharmacists and nurse practitioners and physician's assistants and stuart varney giving flu shots, we cannot have that happen. >> let's turn this around for a second. what's wrong with a pharmacist, for example, taking my blood pressure over a period of time and finding that my blood pressure is too high and prescribing a drug for it. is there something inherently wrong with that? >> i want to walk you through what's wrong with that. when i tell you you'll understand what's wrong with obamacare, here is what's wrong. and when i check your blood pressure, checking blood pressure is something i have done for over 25 years and i have a way to do it. and i compare it in my mind with other blood pressure readings. when you go into a pharmacy, a device that i feel is inaccurate. and i don't think that any of them are accurate, any of those battery powered ones are accurate and you may end up with
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a blood pressure reading, and a pill you don't need and who is monitoring the effects of the pill. someone who has never done that before. you can't replace primary care internists who have within treating them for 25 years with a pharmacist, it's going to end up leading to excess health care costs, how does he know what pills to describe. it devalues the concept of a doctor and his practice, that you're going to have-- you're going to create in california a substandard of health care coverage? >> yes, and putting it in my words, you would decrease quality of health care in the united states. that's what's happening in california what's going to happen-- >> is it inevitable? >> it's inevitable all over the country, when you flood the system with 30 million more uninsured people and ask doctors to take care of them at time when we have a tremendous doctor shortage. >> this only would apply to those people who are getting free health care coverage, medicaid or medical, i believe it's called.
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it won't-- >> i disagree, the more you stretch the doctors thin, the less to stretch around. the more my office floods, the less time for your call, i'm sorry, stuart. one solution i have for it that you might not like is that if instead of the government extending insurance, which is ridiculous, i think they should have provided incentives for medical students coming out of medical school to work in underserved areas. stuart: fine, it's not going to happen. this time next year, obamacare is in full force, am i right about that? >> as dr. carson, said all of this insurance is interfering with the doctor-patient relationship and primary place you can for health care. stuart: we've got it sir, to the gold report. where are we, 1644 per ounce weeks' down 4 bucks, that's it. now this. watered down whiskey, we'll tell you why the people who makes
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makers mark are hoping you're okay with just a little less alcohol in your drink. is that okay with charles payne and liz macdonald, i wonder? ♪
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>> what about the supply and demand. whiskey maker, makers mark says it's going to reduce the amount of the alcohol in the drink because the company did not forsee the high demand in the the product. liz macdonald is with us. if you can't satisfy the demand, don't you just raise the supply? isn't that what you would do? >> yeah, it's classic supply and demand. whiskey purists are very upset about this. and the problem is, it takes so long to make whiskey. stuart: so you can't raise supply in a short time. >> this is like changing the formula from coke to new coke and make it a double because it's watered down. stuart: if you can't raise the supply in the short-term, okay, i've got that. why don't you raise the price to
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cut down on demand. what's wrong with that? >> they'd rather see an increase in price rather than decrease in the alcohol. >> they want it both ways. and bourbon is going through the roof. and the bottom line, it's one of these things, where i like this the new coke thing. i think they're making a huge mistake, i really do and by the way, management says even when the demand slows down you're not going to increase. you know, one of these changes that doesn't reverse itself. and listen, everything's watered down these days, stuart. and the president said the-- everything in america is watered down and expectations. stuart: we were talking during the break with charles and i aid this makers mark goes from 90% proof to 84 proof. so i said to charles, all right. what's the strongest alcohol legally sold in the united states of america. what's the answer? >> everclear. 190 proof. 200 proof is pure so it's 190
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proof. it's not in every state. >> where did you get everclear? >> it's called moonshine. >> i think it is a legal moonshine. next, more talk of investments from nancy pelosi. wait until you hear what she says about spending money on education. plus, eva longoria big time hollywood backer of the president. how does she feel about paying half of her income in taxes? >> because the eva longoria who worked at wendy's flipping burgers she need add tax break, but the eva longoria who works on the movie set. she does not. i need to rethink the core of my portfolio. what i really need is sleep. introducing the ishares core, buildi blocks for the heart of your portfolio. find out why 9 outf 10 large professional investors choose ishares for their etfs. ishares by blackrock. call 1-800-ishares for a prospectus which includes investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses.
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stuart: tonight president obama will echo nancy pelosi. he will call for more investments in education. ms. pelosi set the stage for the state of the union address with her sunday appearance on fox. she said, and i quote, nothing brings in more money to the treasury of the united states than investments in education. we have to recognize that. end quote. really? we're being told that more money to expensive colleges, more money to the teacher pension funds, more money to the unions which build new classrooms do that and we are told we will be prosperous again. remember please it was speaker pelosi who said food stamps deliver, quote, the biggest bang for the buck in stimulating the economy. and the president will follow the pelosi line tonight. he will call for robust government and government
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spending to bring america back to prosperity. what do you think? stuart: welcome everyone to a new hour of varney & company. in just a few minutes, actress and obama supporter eva longoria will join us. we're going to talk fair share in taxes with her. she's going to try and sell me potato chips. that should be interesting. it is coming up very shortly. first though let me introduce our tuesday morning company: liz mcdonald, charles payne, nicole petallides. here they are. check the big board, very early going, still pretty much flat. 14 points up for the dow -- now 17 points up. nicole, shares of michael kors hitting another high; correct? nicole: all-time high. when you talk about accessories, bags, certainly the number one thing people think about with michael kors.
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obviously a stellar performance, all-time high as we see continued demand and a great quarter. stuart: let's give kudos to charles payne you saw that coming you recommended it did you not? charles: so many times. i have told so many young ladies in this building, what kind of watch is that? michael kors. i have been begging people on the show, in the network in the building. my mother sent an e-mail to my daughter, she wants a michael kors bag. stuart: my daughters kept telling me buy michael kors because they like the bags. like apple, they told me to buy apple when it was 57. i didn't. charles: when are you going to listen to them? stuart: we need to get to nancy pelosi. double down on investments in education. she says it brings in the most money to the treasury. you can expect that to be a big theme in tonight's state of the union address. so liz, what's your response to that? education investments, that means you spend more on education, that brings in more money to the treasury than
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anything else, what? liz: she's wrong. i have a lot of teachers in my family. my grandmother was one. my mother was a teacher. nieces, nephews, my sister is in the education system. look, uniformly they say the education has been getting a lot of government spending and uniformity of failure is what they see across the spectrum of education. charles: it is not invest in education. it is investing in a knowledge society. it is not a monetary investment. we need to encourage americans to go out there and learn to appreciate knowledge. okay? the idea that the president could actually win the youth vote by telling them you can go to college, not worry about what your major is, go back home and live in your parent's basement until you are 27 belies what pelosi is trying to suggest. we have a trillion dollars in student aid loans. but the bottom line is we have a country that is really -- it's about knowledge and embracing knowledge. we have a country that doesn't do that anymore. it is not about throwing a lot of money at this. it is not a monetary problem. stuart: but it is a good
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political approach, isn't it? that works, doesn't it? liz: until the viewer understands that even when the education is fed, there's no improvement. 44% of freshman in high schools in chicago don't graduate. i mean that's the president's hometown. stuart: let me move on from this. want to invest more in education. the president will also push for more investments, spending on green energy, for example, doubling down on the policy of the last four years. spend more on infrastructure. just spend more money. it's the same line that we've heard for four years, tax the rich, spend more money. the government will rebuild the middle class. charles: none of those things change the personality of america right now. the personality of actually wanting to go out and succeed. most of these are short-term things. you put a few bucks in someone's pocket for a little while. they learn no skills. there's no sustainable return for america. it is an amazing shame that they would continue to push this stuff. it really is. liz: if you want to create jobs,
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have ditch diggers dig holes with spoons instead of shovels, it's sort of like that. here's the thing, the president's stimulus plan, costs about 200 to 300,000 per job created. those people could eventually get fired. it doesn't add to the economy. it takes taxpayer money. stuart: this is a proposal that the democrats will submit later this week, this is what they want to do instead of sequester, instead of big spending cuts, this is what they want to do. they want to close off a variety of offshore tax shelters. don't know how they are going to do it. they want to end the preferential tax treatment of private equity and hedge fund managers. we've got that. when you exercise a stock option, tax it more heavily. they want to start taxing more heavily subchapter-s corporations. that's what small businesses use to run their finances and their businesses. so that's a list of increases in the ax money that's going to be taken off relatively wealthy
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people. quick comment. charles: there's also going to be more that's not listed there, just like every time they pass something, there's something that's going to hurt everybody in this country that they won't talk about. liz: government paid for green chutes versus setting a business environment to get that 2 trillion in cash overseas at corporations home into the united states. that's the theme. stuart: the market likes it. the dow just hit 14,000 again. we're up 30 points as we speak. by the way, in the last year alone, the government spent more than 2 billion dollars on free cell phones for the poor. that money comes from a fee on your cell phone bill. surprise, surprise, a lot of the people getting the phones cannot prove their eligibility. judge napolitano on that. what is he going to say about fraud and waste? i know what he's going to say. he will be on the air at 10:35 this morning. and now whenever we have a celebrity on our show, we like to ask, how do you feel about paying half your income in taxes? today we have award winning actress and long time president obama supporter eva longoria who is with ussfrom the new york
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stock exchange. ms. longoria, welcome to the program. it is very good to have you with us. >> thanks for having me. stuart: you have been all over our show this morning saying that the actress, eva longoria does not need a tax break. that's what you told the democrat national convention to cheers on the floor. how do you feel though about the tax increase which you've had? how do you feel about paying more than half your income to the government? >> well, you know, i'm a big believer on the theory that the economy -- [inaudible] -- that's where i view with president obama on it. i'm a small business owner now. so a lot of what's going to happen hopefully will happen will benefit the people that need it the most. so i have no problem paying more taxes for people who are going to need that. stuart: do you think that's fair? i mean, you work hard. i know you work hard. people who make serious money work very hard. do you think it's fair?
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just ask that question, fairness -- >> i think it is a great privilege to live in this country with all the benefits that we have to be an american. so i have no problem paying into that. stuart: but is it fair when the government takes more than half your income? i think you live in california. you do business in california. >> i do. stuart: well every dollar over a million that you earn, 63 cents goes to the state government and to the federal government. 63 cents. now, just answer that one, is that fair? >> it depends on what -- define fair. i mean that depends on your view on it. do i think it's fair? sure. i think it's fair if the money is appropriated to the right places, which, you know, for me is education, healthcare, so i think, you know, is it fair for my taxes to be able to pay for someone who has a health crisis? absolutely. is it fair for my money to help kids with public education? absolutely. stuart: real fast. i have charles payne with me. he wants to make a quick comment. go.
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charles: hi eva. we keep using the word fair, but ultimately doesn't this create a false sense of security for these people on the other end of this money, that you know what? i don't really have to do much because someone else has succeeded, they are going to have to give up their money for me. it seems like it's backfired because i don't see anywhere in my world where i grew up and in your world where you grew up where things have changed because of higher taxes. >> what was the last part you said? charles: i don't see where things have changed because people pay higher taxes for the so-called poor. i don't see where it makes a difference in their lives. >> that's your opinion. i'm not going to change your opinion. my opinion is people do have to work hard. i don't think that having healthcare and public education is a deterrent from succeeding. i don't think people are taking that for granted. i do think education would break a cycle of poverty for some of the communities in the lower socioeconomic status. so if my tax dollars can contribute to that, then i'm fine with that.
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stuart: eva, i hear that you're holding a new contest for a new flavor of potato chip. i think that's correct? >> yes, yes, i'm here for lays. lays is having a contest, where all of the americans could submit different flavors -- different flavors. the winner gets 1 million dollars. stuart: what's your favorite? >> i'm not allowed. i'm not allowed to say which one is my favorite. but there are three fantastic flavors. we have chicken and waffles and cheesy garlic bread. of the 4 million flavor submissions, bacon was one of the number one ingredients. stuart: i will bet. >> i thought that was a lot of fun. stuart: did you say a million dollars prize? >> 1 million dollars. the potato chips are available for consumers to go and buy. you can go buy them in your store and try them out. you go to facebook and vote for which one you like.
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the second and third place still get $50,000 each. so that's still life changing as well. but 1 million dollars for somebody who went on facebook and submitted a flavor. stuart: you have to remember, you win a million dollars as a prize and half of it goes to the government. you know that. >> hey, but you have half a million dollars. [laughter] stuart: okay, we should be happy. eva, thank you very much for being with us. we do appreciate it. >> thank you. stuart: not much mainstream media coverage of dr. ben carson's speech at the prayer breakfast last week, not much, except for those who called him disrespectful and inappropriate. our media watchdog is next on that. his part of what dr. carson told us in our last hour. >> i do think we need voices of reason. we need people who can talk about things that make sense, and, you know, the amount of e-mails and calls that we've gotten from across the country, people just resonating so much with something that makes sense.
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today is gonna be an important day for us. you ready? we wanna be our brother's keeper. what's number two we wanna do? bring it up to 90 decatherms. how bo ya, joe? let's go ahead and bring it online. attention on site, attention on site. now starng unit nine. some of the world's cleanest gas turbines are now powering some of america's biggest cities. siemens. answers.
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stuart: google hitting another all-time high, look at this. $784 a share as of now. burger king will introduce 10 new specialty coffees to its menus all across the country. shares of burger king, no response, down 15 cents. a fire in the engine room at a carnival cruise ship has left more than 4,000 people stranded
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on the boat in the gulf of mexico. about 150 miles from the yucatan peninsula. the conditions on board continue to worsen. the ship is expected to be pulled to mobile alabama tomorrow. another hit for carnival cruise lines but the stock is actually up 26 cents. go figure. we have been talking about dr. carson's lecture to president obama, but much of the mainstream media flat out ignored it or were critical and hostile to it. we will talk to brent bozell next. he follows the media. that's what he does. how did they react to dr. carson? did you know not all fiber is the same?
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stuart: in the last hour, we spoke to dr. ben carson about his now widely reported speech at the national prayer breakfast. widely reported it seems everywhere but the mainstream media. and any coverage that there was was mostly i think negative. joining us now is our media watchdog brent bozell, founder of the media research center. brent, this speech, it made an enormous impact on our viewers here on fox business. and i believe on the fox news channel as well. tell me how it was treated in the rest of the media. >> well, the first thing i want to do is to tell you i take offense at the fact that you called eva longoria a celebrity and you haven't called me a celebrity. stuart: how do you feel about spending more than half your money on taxes, brent? >> i'm happy to spend half her
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money. [laughter] stuart: good one. >> this ben carson thing, what a rock star, this person is. i have been getting e-mails from europe about this. i have been getting people calling me, e-mailing me, who is this man? where did he come from? i've watched that speech. it is mesmerizing. he is so positive. he's so loving. he talks about having a ferocious temper when he was growing up. he's the opposite of that. his ideas of tithing, his ideas of health savings accounts, they are rrveting. so you would think that with this explosion of interest all over the internet, worldwide, that the national news media might think it's news. and yet there they go, no coverage. when you do get coverage, the little coverage that it's gotten is critical, how dare he talk like that in front of the president. stuart: but he put out a very eloquent statement of conservative economic policy. i mean, he did.
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market oriented, free market, competition, personal responsibility, wrapped up in a moral structure. he put that out. i think in some ways he assumed a leadership position of conservatives. >> what he did stuart which is what's been lacking frankly in the conservative movement and in the republican party is specific tangible recommendations and policy proposals that you put on the table instead of just criticizing the opponents, you know, which is an easy thing to do. he made no criticism of the man to his right. he didn't attack him on anything that i can recall. he just offered a better idea on both things. and like i said, it's riveting. and i would encourage anybody to google that and watch this man and listen to the entirety of the speech. it's about 25 minutes long. i'm telling you, it is one of the best addresses that i have
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heard in years. stuart: but i can't believe with all this impact that it's had, i can't believe it's just not being picked up at all by the establishment media. although there have been a couple of comments that it was inappropriate to talk politics at the national prayer breakf t breakfast -- breakfast. >> i do believe it because you see it time and again happening. but here's the reality because of you folks because of fox and because of talk radio and especially because of the internet, the toothpaste is out of the tube, a story does get out, it takes longer and has to go through more circles but eventually resonates with the population. this story will not stop growing. this man's popularity will not stop growing. this proves why the networks are becoming increasingly irrelevant. stuart: what do you think is in dr. carson's future? i'm told -- i hould have checked it with him. he may be retiring soon.
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i'm not totally sure of that, but i believe he's retiring. i think it's in june of this year, very soon. what's his future? >> i would say with the next republican administration, the next republican president would be an -- he needs to name this man secretary of hhs. -- the next republican president needs to name this man secretary of hhs. stuart: thank you very much brent. see you soon. now we move to apple, it is sitting on a huge pile of cash. that's kind of a nice problem to have, you know. i will tell you what i think apple should do with the money. that would be my take and it's next. friday night, buddy.
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stuart: check that market because we're hovering right around 14,000. we're up 27 points as of right now. to nicole, avon up big today. why is that? nicole: oh, my goodness. take a look at this stock. while it's not an annual high, about 3 1/2 dollars off the annual high, with this move, 16%, avon products is doing so well. they have done well with their
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sales. they saw sales improving in brazil and russia. so that did well for them. and you could see it here, above the $20 line. so they've also had a lot of cost cuts which does very well for a name like avon products. now great interview with eva longoria, and i have to tell you, some of the traders are telling me that they think we were separated at birth. i don't know. i think our viewers should write in and see whether or not they think there's some sort of similarity between eva longoria -- should i go like this? what do you think? stuart: it is uncanny, there's a direct look-alike quality right there. congratulations nicole. nicole: that's my celebrity look-alike. if i only had her businesses, her film and her life; right? she works very hard. i thought she answered your questions quite poignantly. you were on point. and she's made these comments before. she did well with her response. i thought it was a good interview. you even talked about the chips.
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stuart: are we done? nicole: can the viewers write in and say if they think there's a resemblance or not? stuart: varney @ foxbusiness.com is there or is there not a resemblance between eva longoria and our nicole petallides? it is uncanny. that's the truth. charles, we want to make money for people on this program. okay? so charles i believe you have a stock. you like it. you are going to make money on it. charles: pike electric. i love this company. they are involved in construction and helping utility companies. they make a lot of money in constructing utility company things or rebuilding. all these storms have been an guys. in 06, after hurricane dennis, they worked in florida on one problem. and this year alone they have already helped utilities in alabama, florida, mississippi, louisiana, indiana, kentucky, west virginia, virginia, ohio,
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pennsylvania, maryland, and north carolina. this year alone, and that's just gravy on the other things that they are doing. the company was founded by a guy well over 50 years ago. he found a truck submerged in water, pulled it out, cleaned it by hand in the middle of winter, drove it home. this is a great company with great pedigree. i think it is going to go much higher. stuart: fascinating. that's terrific. pike electric. we shall watch it. hold on. tim cook is on the stage at an investors meeting. he says -- it's in san francisco. he's just said that the board is very active in considering how to get some of their cash pile back to investors. okay? that's an interesting concept. apple is still down about a buck. i've got more in my take on that coming up in a few seconds. and now, the business of on-line video. seeing tremendous growth. look at netflix, for example. well, later this hour, i will talk to the head of an on-line
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comedy network. and i'm going to ask him, how do you make money with video on the internet? very interesting answer he has got for us. that will be at 10:45. years ago, my teenage daughters told me to buy stock in apple. it was $57 a share back then. i bought microsoft instead. that has been a problem for me. but apple's success has generated a problem it probably did not see coming, a massive, and i mean massive pile of cash. here's my take on a problem that i wish i had seen coming. 137 billion dollars cash, that is in apple's bank. what's the problem with that? well, everybody wants a piece of it. everybody has their own idea of what to do with it. and the top guy tim cook is under intense pressure to do something with it. in comes a well known investor, he tells apple's board to create
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a whole new class of stock that would pay a big dividend, that would attract people who want a piece of the cash pile without worrying about the huge ups and downs of the common stock. that's just one idea. here are some others. buy something big. okay, well, they've got the money, but a big purchase would probably run up against antitrust laws. so plow the cash into a whole new category of consumer products. okay. but does apple have the creative genius now that steve jobs is not the boss? how about increasing the regular dividend. they could do that, but it would commit the company to a huge payout every year virtually forever. there's a problem with that. apple would have to bring back tens of billions of dollars from overseas. that would mean paying the 35% u.s. corporate tax rate. do apple shareholders really want that? well, here's my opinion, take the einhorn option for a special high dividend stock, and with the rest of the money, do an amazon, that is, plow it back into the company to expand.
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that way shareholders who want income get it, and shareholders who want a dynamic expanding business also get what they want. but be careful, apple, the government wants its piece. at the state of the union speech tonight, guess who chief executive officer tim cook will be sitting next to? right next to the first lady. no pressure. i'm a conservative investor. but that doesn't mean i don't want to make money. i love making money. i try to be smart with my investments. i also try to keep my costs down. what's your plan? ishares. low cost and tax efficient. find out why nine out of ten large professional investors choose ishares for their etfs. ishares by blackrock. call 1-800-ishares for a prospectus which includes investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. read and consider it carefully before investing. risk includes possible loss of principal.
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now! on apple. tim clark says the board and management are in, quote, very active discussions about recording that is returning cash to investors because david einhorn's idea about a new class of stock that will pay higher dividend is created. what are your thoughts on this? liz: apple keeps an estimated 70% of its cash overseas every dead at hospitable tax climate here they are going to go on a shopping spree--nearly $29 billion. this amid the senate probe into corporate cash held overseas. stuart: they will be penalized
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to $20 billion. liz: almost over period of years. stuart: stock is down $2. charles: i am worried tim cook is bidding in michelle obama's box tonight and there's a call for american corporations to bring that money home or have the american government take it under some form of emergency and infrastructure building emergency, kill the old tax laws, take that money back even if you don't bring it back with tim cook sitting there supporting such aid thing. i have been worried about this for a long time. something is far-fetched but keep an eye on that. stuart: no pressure. president obama will deliver the state of the union address and he is expected to demand more spending. let's bring in tres knippa from the cme. i think the stock market will like this. a lot of oz will not like more government spending but i think the market will react positively. >> he is going to call all the
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spending, investment. what is a real shame is as the president looks over this joint session of congress why can't he looked and know that these are senators from individual state and congressman from individual states? why can't he go and look at the individual states that are doing well? that is where with the reduction in spending with as he looks at the joint session of congress he can stay in that state that appears to be working, why not try that at a federal level? is not going to happen. stuart: i have to ask are you going to watch? >> no. i have dinner plans. i don't intend to what. stuart: i predict they will be bobbing up and down with standing ovations 40 times. that is my guests on the number of interruptions standing up to applaud. >> have you set the over under
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at 40 first and of nations? i want to know what the line is on fox business. stuart: 40. the under over line is 40. thank you very much. think the ec does not have a spending problem? listen to this. last year the government's than $2 billion on free cellphones for low-income people. there's a problem here. 41% of those people that receive -pthe phones could not prove th they qualified, that they were eligible for the program. all rise, the judge andrew napolitano is here. it seems to me that if you offer a government program, people will take it. give them something for free and they will come out of the work with -- would work and take it, 6,000,003 cellphones. judge napolitano: it is human nature to want to accept something from the government. not only will make it but rely on them. when the sun doesn't work anymore they will go back to the source and ask for again. in my world government wouldn't be giving away cellphones, wouldn't be giving away anything
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but it is going to do so it should do so in a prudent manner to make sure only those who qualify for the program receive it, something the government didn't do so it is more taxpayer dollars wasted, more dependencies created. two thing the government should not do. i am restraining myself. they might as well take $2 million and turn it into a fireplace in the west wing. stuart: everybody with a regular phone bill weathered is cellphone bill or land line bill, we pay an average of $2.50 per month to pay for free cellphones for six million people. my point would be that is buying votes because you are buying votes basically, giving something away, vote for me. you can never take it back. you will never see the end -- judge napolitano: it would take great political courage or politician and the end of his career, bring this to the mitt
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romney statement that was exposed during the campaign. is the president buying the votes of the 47% who receive government is free and the number keeps growing. charles: there has been speculation of last couple years one of the reasons for this is ultimately people will be allowed to vote on those phones. don't have to worry about turnout. don't have to worry about turnout. people can call in number, hit a button and vote. their constituents will be there. great way to repay. judge napolitano: ballot security. stuart: during the segment you have been extremely restrained. we want to hold you over for another segment. judge napolitano: unleashed something. stuart: i know you will unleash something. judge napolitano: you are wild. stuart: has nothing to do with the queen and everything to do with houston, texas and fingerprinting people and photographing them when they sell gold.
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restrain yourself for now. we will get to that little bit later on. are you ready? [talking over each other] stuart: how do you make money on online video? i will talk to the head of an online, the network. he is making money. here is a little sample of their programming. >> you know what that means. my antenna. >> i am john benjamin. >> ready watson. >> gilbert gottfried. >> impressive. >> go tell it on the mountain.
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stuart: apple ceo tim cook saying at a meeting with investors that apple is very involved in active discussions about returning cash to investors. he also says david einhorn's idea of a special fear of high dividend paying stock is, quote, creative. all quote -- also said apple has considered and acquisitions. apple stock is down $5. overstock.com announced its chairman of the board had return will take a leave of absence for medical reasons. stock is down. netflix struck a partnership with dreamworks animation to produce the first-ever
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children's tv series for netflix based on the upcoming film called turbo. netflix stock is up $186 a share. national average for gas, $3.60 a gallon. more in a moment. [ male announcer ] at his current pace,
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tesla, new york times manages out with this piece that personally i think was a hit piece. tesla says it was a hit piece and the law must put out a tweet to n.y. times article that it is called -- stuart: it makes an electric sports car, the new york times tested it charles: i would not solid base on the new york times these. may be a loss of 35 on our pullback to grow that. i'm looking to get back into it. i just think it was a hit piece because the new york times, tesla is eating lunch, approving a private company can do this. stuart: like an electric car company. charles: i like elon musk better than the car. stuart: he has a british accent.
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a world of online video obviously growing. companies like apple, google, microsoft making money. robert barnett is with us, the ceo of the comedy network, his company agreed to a content deal with microsoft. welcome to the program. >> thanks for having me. stuart: you accumulate video and put it out on line like microsoft for example. how do you make money? >> we start by building a brand. democracy is great on the internet. everyone is there. is a level playing field but ultimately you need to get great talent and the best content to make money. our company started by producing original content and only now are we acquiring the content of others in the comedy network. stuart: you sell that content to the microsofts of this world or anyone with an online network outlet. >> a great event in business
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took place in may of 2012. we started this idea in 2006. we didn't think it would take eric schmidt six years to stand up on stage at the beacon theater in new york and pronounced the third way of, broadcast cable internet. it was only in 2012 that youtube decided to select 100 companies and fund them to create original content. that created a wave and now you have seven companies, youtube, yahoo! ms and -- [talking over each other] stuart: google and youtubes of this world are paying for you to bring on content on to youtube and others are paying you to bring your content on to their networks. that is the way you are making money. >> advertising, licensing and production deals. liz: google doesn't break out separate results for youtube so youtube is losing money for
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years because it costs a lot of money to hold that content online. the making money? >> we are making money. we closed seven figure deals for years. the perceived chaos that is out there right now in everyone's mind makes this the best time for content creators and entrepreneurs to control costs can make money. stuart: we ran a montage of the content you have got, some established cars. you got names. >> we believe on day one the easiest thing you could do was get somebody who is known on the internet but we also created new stars from youtube people we discovered. there has been a myth. we have people like paul rudd, doughnut hole, elizabeth banks, asia david wayne created, these are all originals from the biggest movie stars in the land but also discovered a lady named the lead raise who on a daily basis is getting millions of viewers for her channel.
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stuart: my damn channel. we will remember it. robert barnett, thanks for joining us. the judge is back next, ready to sound off on the city of houston, requiring fingerprints and photographs if you want to sell gold. we will be right back.
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stuart: let's suppose you are in houston and you want to cash out your goals, be prepared for breach of privacy. if you want to sell your goals you will now have to be photographed and fingerprinted. how about that? are can't imagine what the judge thinks about that but i have a good guess. if they do impose this kind of regulation will it stand up in court? judge napolitano: i don't think it will. this is an interference in interstate commerce and only congress can regulate interstate commerce. the reason for the commerce clause in the constitution was to prevent localities from creating insurmountable barriers to the free movement of goods. only congress can do that. stuart: it doesn't stand a. judge napolitano: i don't think a court would throw it out for that reason. stuart: they say they're doing it to cut down on stolen gold. judge napolitano: that is hogwash. you can buy a car, you can buy a
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house without giving figures prints and photographs. they don't like people buying and selling gold because it is frequently done with cash and is an easy way to avoid taxes. this is just a different way for the government to confiscate money. what is it about guns and gold the government tries to prevent us from engaging in a free transaction of them? stuart: people buy and sell gold coins with cash, taxes? judge napolitano: of course they do. i have done it. stuart: but you are assuming it is all income-tax is, all capital gains taxes. i suspect it is more than that. estate taxes. judge napolitano: you could have a functional equivalence of your estate off to your heirs in a shoebox if you put it in the right person's mouth. gold would be too big and heavy but you could do it with diamonds.
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the government's needs to respect people's privacy and needs to respect their natural right to engage in free market transactions. it can't isolate and industry and say give us a fingerprint before you can buy that. liz: i don't know how you would enforce with ebay, one councilman says it is like the clearing fees that field must turn themselves in. judge napolitano: as a practical matter the transactions will take place outside the borders. you go to the gold dealer in downtown houston and he says fine but you have to go outside, ten miles from here to take position. stuart: i am surprised that your equanimity, your columnist. i am really shocked. thank you very much indeed. the highlight reel is next. we know all your investments may not be with fidelity, but we can still help you see your big picture. with the fidelity guidedortfolio summary, you choose which accounts to track and use fidelity's analytics to spot trends, gain insights, and figure out what you want to do next.
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attention on site, attention on site. now starting unit nine. some of the world's cleanest gas turbines are now powering some of america'biggest cities. siemens. answers. all your imptant legal matters in just minutes. protect youramily... and launch your dreams. at legalzoom.com we put the law on your side. stuart: i will call this the ben carson highlight reel. will it please. what is your next move? are you going to stand for elected office?
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>> nothing makes sense coming out of washington because everything is attached to a special interest group. >> what a rock star phenomenon this person is. >> such a cesspool. the next republican president would be an absolute dunderhead if he didn't name of this man secretary of hhs. people resonating so much with something that makes sense. one of the best addresses i have heard in years. stuart: we really covered exhaustively but we are not done. liz has something else is a. liz: i watched the speech, refreshing glass of common sense and truth and worth watching. he has a political future. i think he does. stuart: he retires as one of the world's great neurosurgeons soon and you think he becomes a leadership position in politics. liz: compelling man with a compelling baxley, single mom in detour, fantastic mother, role model. stuart: brent bozell says health and human services secretary and use a? charles: says it is a hot rocks or in health and human services,

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